The CubanAmerican Voice®
 

Florida Residents Frustrated by Mismatched Coronavirus Test Results

Mismatched Coronavirus Test Results Florida

As another wave of coronavirus spreads through Florida, flaws in the queue system for coronavirus testing are resulting in errors.

“I got a call asking for me, and they told me that I had tested positive. I was like, ‘Positive for what?” Then, the lady said for COVID, and I said, ‘That’s impossible. I never got tested, Ma’am,’” resident Mindy Clark told local ABC affiliate WWSB. She is not alone. Coronavirus tests can take as long as a week to deliver results, and even one person leaving the queue can ruin an entire day’s records.

Subscribe to our Newsletter

According to reporting by local ABC affiliate WWSB, “Clark had gone to the drive thru testing sight at Manatee Rural Health, but before she was able to get swabbed, she left the line because she realized it was for people with symptoms only.” Dr. Jay Wolfson, Public Health & Medicine Professor for the University of South Florida, explained the problem:

This is part of the testing mechanism problem. People are sitting in their cars, sometimes for hours, or standing in line, six feet apart sometimes for hours. You’re registered though, you’re number 15 in line, and you are Jay Wolfson.

If Jay Wolfson says he can’t wait any longer and he leaves, it will get number 15 and now get Rebecca Fernandez, who was standing behind him, and she tests positive, and then everyone from then on gets the wrong results. There has to be a better way to do this.

And correcting the errors is allegedly left to the patients. “I told them they needed to take this off my record, and they said I had to prove it to them that I wasn’t positive,” Clark said. She complied, and two days later tested negative for both the disease and the antibodies that would suggest she had it in the past.

It is one more difficulty added to a historically complicated year, further decreasing morale among Floridians. “It’s such a bad time. These last five months have been so bad. People don’t need these added mistakes. Everyone is already so nervous and trying so hard, and these mistakes are really causing more anxiety in people,” Clark said.

Even so, Dr. Wolfson stressed that the errors in results did not represent an excuse for complacency in the ongoing battle against the novel coronavirus pandemic. “The trust is real, but the disease is more real. Trust the fact that the disease is real. The data may be confusing, the state has to clean up their act, but the disease is real and very concerning. Protect yourself. Be safe out there. Be safe and be well.”

Author: Nate Church, writer for Breitbart

OTHER ARTICLES:

The price of one-sided Rx

The price of one-sided Rx. Which Diseases Are on the Rise As We Fight COVID-19? The battle against COVID-19 has been a grand and tragic balancing act. The battle against COVID-19 has been a grand and tragic balancing act. Reopening countries ...

The left lies about coronavirus

The left lies about coronavirus. BEWARE: Democrats Are Pushing These Four COVID-19 Lies. Beware of three widely circulating COVID-19-related lies and the partisan motives behind them. These lies are dangerous to your children and how you cope with...

Coronaphobia is more dangerous than virus

Coronaphobia is more dangerous than virus. We Need a Principled Anti-Lockdown Movement Shell-shocked is a good way to describe the mood in the U.S. for a good part of the Spring of 2020. Most of us never thought it could happen here. I certainly d...

Trump Blames FDA 'Deep State' for Coronavirus Vaccine Delay

President Donald Trump on Saturday accused the “deep state” in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of delaying a vaccine for the coronavirus. “The deep state, or whoever, over at the FDA is making it very difficult for drug companies to ge...

UCLA-Stanford U study: Covid death rates much lower than projected.

UCLA-Stanford U study: Covid death rates much lower than projected. What’s your risk from coronavirus? Lower than we think, new study suggests. But critics say the study oversimplified answers to one of COVID-19’s most vexing questions Months in...